
Vertigo Comics
- Founded
- January 1, 1993
- Comic Series
- The Sandman, John Constantine, Hellblazer, Preacher, Y: The Last Man, Fables
DCU's Elseworlds franchise is set to be separate from James Gunn's DCU storyline, which opens the door for many unique Vertigo Comics adaptations.
Alien Books' new Damaged People, by acclaimed creator Damian Connelly, is the perfect throwback to 1990s style Vertigo horror.
Transmetropolitan is a gonzo thrill ride inspired by the works of Hunter S. Thompson, so naturally there are drugs involved. Here are the 10 wildest!
Subscribers to the Ultra tier of DC Universe Infinite just got access to a whopping 5000 titles with hits from its Black Label and Vertigo imprints.
Grant Morrison once manifested the spirit of John Lennon, and later adapted the event for their landmark Vertigo series The Invisibles.
Neil Gaiman's Books of Magic, originally a Vertigo series and now re-imagined within the Sandman Universe, is the perfect Harry Potter replacement!
Vertigo was the cutting edge of DC comics, with an eye towards Sci-Fi, fantasy, and horror. These are the 10 best Vertigo comics, according to Ranker.
DC Comics' Vertigo imprint published action-packed stories, and a new AfterShock Comics series from Vertigo's Peter Milligan brings back that spirit.
Preacher from Vertigo has an anti-hero named Saint of Killers that would have made a perfect villain for the crused Marvel hero Ghost Rider.
DC is bringing back a long-absent hero - the Human Target - in a new series created by the team of writer Tom King and artist Greg Smallwood.
What if the Fantastic Four's kids grew up and became the Teen Titans? The answer is Astro City's First Family, the multi-generational heroes.
DC’s Vertigo Comics said its final goodbye to fans across the globe, leaving a legacy as one of comics' most groundbreaking publishers.
With the Sandman away, The Dreaming gets its strangest master ever, in the form of an insane artifical intelligence. Read our preview now.
The American Carnage comic series from DC/Vertigo is pulling no punches in its dive into white supremacy. Read our preview of Issue #6 now.